Hi, I'm Michael Corayer and this is Psych Exam Review. In this video we'll be looking at the last box in our three box model and this is the long-term memory store. The first thing to note about our long-term memory store is that it seems to have an unlimited capacity by that I mean it can never really be full you know it's not the case that somebody's memory can be so full that they can't store anything new without getting rid of something else right in fact it seems that the more you know then the more easily you can integrate new information because you have more things that you can connect it to and that makes it actually easier to remember new things so when we look closely at long-term memory just like with the other boxes in our model when we look closely at it we see that actually there's multiple parts to it so when we talk about long-term memory we can actually be referring to a number of different things just like with sensory memory you know that actually refers to information from all of the senses just like short-term memory then begin to include working memory which then has its components now if you look closely at long-term memory we can roughly divided it up into two main parts and then we'll see that each of those have other parts as well so the first type of Explicit Memory long-term memory that we can look at is called explicit memory and you may also see this called declarative memory and so this is memory for things that we can talk about things that we can declare right so we hold information and we can talk about right so the first type of explicit memory that we have is semantic memory and so what semantic memory refers to is factual knowledge so if I ask you what's the capital of France right you can come up with a factual answer that you've learned right or if I ask you what a particular word means right that would be a type of semantic knowledge right factual knowledge of the world names dates places word meanings these types of things would all be considered semantic memory but that's not the only type of memory that you can talk about we also have the next type of explicit memory and this is our episodic memory an episodic memory refers to narratives episodes so it's narratives and events now a good way to think about this is if I were to ask you what did you do yesterday the answer that you're going to give me is probably going to be an episodic memory you're going to give me some of the major events and sort of the narrative and what it meant for you you're not going to give me a list of facts right I mean there's essentially an infinite number of facts you could tell me about what you did yesterday you can tell me you know at 304 p.m. and 27 seconds I stood up and I took 15 steps to the refrigerator and then I applied four and a half pounds of force to the handle in order to open it you know you technically those are all facts about your day that you could tell me when I asked you what you did yesterday but that's really not what I'm asking for right what I'm asking for is the narrative I must mean what happened to you that was interesting yesterday well what had meaning right and you're really when we create our episodic memory we're able to extract the gist of things right we have all of this factual information that we could encode we could draw upon and yet we somehow automatically condense it down it's really amazing that our minds are able to do this right things happen to us we spend an hour at some event and we can just automatically condense that down into you know a two or three sentence description about what it all meant when somebody says hey how was you know how is that event you went to right you don't have to sit through all its like automatically then sifted through and you can just spit out well here's what it meant here was what was interesting about it here's how it influenced me right and it's amazing that we can do this and so when a lot of people talk about you know improving their memory or wanting to you know wishing they had a better memory or something like that often the focus is I think too much on this idea of factual knowledge and semantic knowledge this idea that you know if I could just remember more facts you know everything would be easier when in fact it seems that that's the least important type of explicit memory that we have I mean facts are like you know there's an infinite number of them and so we don't want to remember all of them I mean what would be the point right it's actually more amazing that we can sift through and pull out the meaningful ones very easily okay so that's our Implicit Memory episodic memory and the next type of memory that we have in our long-term memory is our implicit memory or you may see this referred to as non declarative memory okay so what do we mean by implicit memory well the most common type of implicit memory that is usually referred to is what's called procedural memory and so what procedural memory refers to is our knowledge for how to do things okay and this is implicit or non declarative because we can't really talk about it so if I ask you how do you ride a bike I mean you know how to ride a bike let's say but when it comes to telling me you don't really have access to that you know you can try to describe well okay you put your feet here you sit here you will hold the handlebars but that's not really telling you how to do it right you just have to do it right it's a it's an implicit memory and that you can perform it but you don't necessarily have declarative access to this and it's hard to explain how you do it in the same way I might ask you how do you tie your shoes no of course you know how to tie your shoes but you might find when you want to give me the instructions you actually have to do it and like watch what your hands are doing and say okay I guess I do this and then I pull this through here and like you don't so when you do that behavior it's not that you're calling up a list of instructions and following them right it's that you're doing it and from that you can try to create a list of instructions but it's not really how you do it all right that's the difference between this explicit and implicit memory and there are other types of implicit memory and when we get to the unit on consciousness maybe I'll talk a little bit about other types of unconscious influences on behavior and how those might be a part of our implicit memory but for now if you know the idea of procedural memory as being an implicit memory that should be sufficient now it's also interesting when you think about how you learn this right because if I ask you you know at the end of the day let's say you were learning to ride a bike I asked you at the end of a you know what did you learn today it can be true that you learned how to ride a bike you got better at it you've got more practice but you don't come up with and you don't have any sort of idea of how to explain you don't say well today in my you know bike practice I learned how to apply just enough pressure with my left foot to the pedal and shift my body weight in such a way that I can maintain my balance and also accelerate that could very well be what you learned how to do that could be something you got better at that day but it's like not even in your awareness at all that that's really what was happening all you know is like it you felt like it was easier to ride your bike that day okay so those are the different types of long-term memories that we have and we see just like with the other boxes you know when we look closely at this sort of simplified model we look closely at each box we see there's actually much more complicated than it first appears right and so you might first look at the three box model and think well we really understand memory pretty well we've got this neat little diagram it looks very simple but actually each of those boxes is very complicated and that's certainly the case with this long-term memory store and then we ask well how exactly do they relate to one another how do we draw things out of our long-term memory into our short-term memory or into our working memory how do we do that like effortlessly and we integrate things something happens to me and it reminds me of some other memory like how is all of that happening we don't really know it's very complicated and that's even before we try to figure out the biology of how exactly is this physically happening in our mind our neurons making these new connections and how are they storing memories and how are they being retrieved properly you know it's really a mystery and it's one of these things that the closer we look at it the more we learn about it it seems all we learned is that it's actually more complicated than we thought so don't get the idea that just because we've covered all of these three boxes now they like you really have this you know we have this amazing understanding of how memory functions it's really not the case there's still a lot of unanswered questions that we have but it gives us a simplification allows us to talk about this and that sort of identify the areas that we understand in the areas that of course we need more explanation okay I hope you found this helpful if so please like the video and subscribe to the channel for more thanks for watching